This blog exists to support liberatory collectivist activism that is anti-patriarchy, anti-colonialism, and anti-capitalism. It also seeks to center the experiences, theories, and agendas of radical and feminist women of color.

This post's links detail why 'First World'-only justice movements, for people in the First World, are anti-woman if they don't center the experiences of women around the world enduring injustices and horrors not generally experienced by privileged women, and men, in the First World.

For me, a white male from the misnamed First World, seeing images is going to be as bad as it gets. I won't endure the experience of holding a baby with horrifying birth defects, nor will I be a woman who lives in a country where these birth defects, rape, military invasion, and white, patriarchal, imperialist terrorism are, together, committed by the military from the U.S. I can suffer from seeing images and hearing stories, but that's quite different from being the terrorised, horrified person in them.

The U.S. war on Iraq began ten years ago this week. Democracy Now! has been reporting on this war's crimes against humanity, and what U.S. media will not tell us about it. We must, collectively, require accountability and justice from the U.S. for these war crimes.

NERMEENSHAIKH: And what do you see has happened in Iraq in these last 10 years?

YANARMOHAMMED:
It’s just getting worse. We are again in a police state. We have
armies, police and all kinds of intelligence institutions around us. We
have SWAT. We have anti-riot. It’s all kinds of security institutions around us.

And on top of that, I see the women in my
country getting much weaker. I see an epidemic rise in certain kinds of
birth defects. And when we try to organize women—we sent women from my
organization to a town in Haweeja. We were surprised to see hundreds of
children that had birth disabilities. We see things in Iraq that we’ve
never seen in our lives.

I also see young women, orphans of war, female
orphans of war, that are being trafficked. And the state absolutely has
no obligation towards them. The young women who are being trafficked
come to our organization and to our shelters. They don’t even have the
right to citizenship in Iraq. We are speaking here about tens of
thousands of orphans of war who are absolutely not being taken care of.
Neither the Iraqi government nor the U.S. experts in Iraq do anything
about it.

Here, Arundhati Roy speaks out about the complete psychosis of U.S. leaders in thinking things are better for women in Afghanistan now than ten-plus years ago:

http://www.democracynow.org/2013/3/18/arundhati_roy_on_iraq_wars_10th

Below is an excerpt from the transcript:

We are dealing with a psychopathic situation.
And all of us, including myself, we can’t do anything but keep being
reasonable, keep saying what needs to be said. But that doesn’t seem to
help the situation, because, of course, as we know, after Iraq, there’s
been Libya, there’s Syria, and the rhetoric of, you know, democracy
versus radical Islam. When you look at the countries that were attacked,
none of them were Wahhabi Islamic fundamentalist countries. Those ones
are supported, financed by the U.S., so there is a real collusion
between radical Islam and capitalism. What is going on is really a
different kind of battle.

And, you know, most people are led up a path
which keeps them busy. And in a way, all of us are being kept busy,
while the real business at the heart of it—I mean, apart from the people
who suffered during the war. Let’s not forget the sanctions. Let’s not
forget Madeleine Albright saying that a million children dying in Iraq
because of the sanctions was a hard price but worth it. I mean, she was
the victim, it seems, of the sanctions; you know, her softness was
called upon, and she had to brazen herself to do it. And today, you have
the Democrats bombing Pakistan, destroying that country, too. So, just
in this last decade, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria—all these
countries have been—have been shattered.

You know, we heard a lot about why—you know,
the war in Afghanistan was fought for feminist reasons, and the Marines
were really on this feminist mission. But today, all the women in all
these countries have been driven back into medieval situations. Women
who were liberated, women who were doctors and lawyers and poets and
writers and—you know, pushed back into this Shia set against Sunnis. The
U.S. is supporting al-Qaeda militias all over this region and
pretending that it’s fighting Islam. So we are in a situation of—it is
psychopathic.